You Shall Be as Gods: A Radical Interpretation of the Old Testament and Its Tradition

Summary

Erich Fromm’s innovative analysis of the Old Testament as a striking early example of radical humanismThe Old Testament is one of the most carefully studied books in the world’s history. It is also one of the most misunderstood. This founding text of the world’s three largest religions is also, Erich Fromm argues, an impressive radical humanist text. He sees the stories of mankind’s transition from divided clans to united brotherhood as a tribute to the human power to overcome. Filled with hopeful symbolism, You Shall Be As Gods shows how the Old Testament and its tradition is an inspiring ode to human potential.
This ebook features an illustrated biography of Erich Fromm including rare images and never-before-seen documents from the author’s estate.

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You Shall Be as Gods - Erich Fromm

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F.

I. Introduction

IS THE HEBREW BIBLE, the Old Testament, more than a historical relic to which polite reverence is paid because it is the fountainhead of the three great Western religions? Has it anything to say to man today—man living in a world of revolutions, automation, nuclear weapons, with a materialistic philosophy that implicitly or explicitly denies religious values?

It would hardly seem that the Hebrew Bible could still be relevant. The Old Testament (including the Apocrypha) is a collection of writings by many authors, written during more than a millennium (about 1200 to 100 B.C.). It contains codes of law, historical accounts, poems, prophetic speeches, only a part of a larger literature produced by the Hebrews during these eleven hundred years.¹ These books were written in a small country on the crossroads between Africa and Asia, for men living in a society that neither culturally nor socially had any resemblance to ours.

We know, of course, that the Hebrew Bible was one of the main inspirations not only of Judaism but also of Christianity and Islam, and thus deeply influenced the cultural development of Europe, America, and the Near East. Yet it seems today that, even among Jews and Christians, the Hebrew Bible is not much more than a respected voice of the past. Among most Christians the Old Testament is little read in comparison with the New Testament. Furthermore, much of what is read is often distorted by prejudice. Frequently the Old Testament is believed to express exclusively the principles of justice and revenge, in contrast to the New Testament, which represents those of love and mercy; even the sentence, Love your neighbor as yourself, is thought by many to derive from the New, not the Old Testament. Or the Old Testament is believed to have been written exclusively in a spirit of narrow nationalism and to contain nothing of supranational universalism so characteristic of the New Testament. Indeed, there is encouraging evidence of changes in attitudes and practice both among Protestants and Catholics, but much remains to be done.

Jews who attend religious services are more familiar with the Old Testament, since a portion of the Pentateuch is read each Sabbath, and on Mondays and Thursdays as well, and the entire Pentateuch is completed once every year.² This knowledge is further increased by the study of the Talmud, with its innumerable quotations from the Scriptures. While those who follow this tradition are a minority of Jews today, this way of life was common to all until only about a century and a half ago. In the traditional life of the Jews the study of the Bible was fostered by the need to base all new ideas and religious teachings on the authority of biblical verses; this use of the Bible, however, had an ambiguous effect. Because biblical verses were employed to support a new idea or religious law, they were often quoted out of context, and an interpretation was imposed on them which did not correspond to their real meaning. Even where no such distortion occurred, there was often more interest in the usefulness of one verse in support of a new idea than in the meaning of the total context in which it occurred. In fact, the text of the Bible was better known via the Talmud and the weekly recitations than through direct, systematic study. The study of the oral tradition (Mishnah, Gemara, and so on) was of greater importance and a more exciting intellectual challenge.

Throughout the centuries the Bible was understood by the Jews not only in the spirit of their own tradition but also, to a considerable extent, under the influence of the ideas of other cultures with which their scholars had contact. Thus Philo saw the Old Testament in the spirit of Plato; Maimonides in the spirit of Aristotle; Hermann Cohen in the spirit of Kant. The classic commentaries, however, were written in the Middle Ages; the most outstanding commentator is R. Solomon ben Isaac (1040-1105), known as Rashi, who interpreted the Bible in the conservative spirit of medieval feudalism.³ This is true even though his and other commentaries on the Hebrew Bible clarified the text linguistically and logically, and often enriched it by turning to the haggadic compilations of the rabbis, the Jewish mystic lore, and sometimes to Arabic and Jewish philosophers.

For the many generations of Jews after the end of the Middle Ages, especially for those living in Germany, Poland, Russia, and Austria, the medieval spirit of these classic commentaries helped to reinforce the tendencies rooted in their own ghetto situation, where they had little contact with the social and cultural life of the modern age. On the other hand, those Jews who, beginning with the end of the eighteenth century, became part of the contemporary European culture had, in general, little interest in studying the Old Testament.

The Old Testament is a book of many colors, written, edited, and re-edited by many writers in the course of a millennium and containing in itself a remarkable evolution from primitive authoritarianism and clannishness to the idea of the radical freedom of man and the brotherhood of all men. The Old Testament is a revolutionary book; its theme is the liberation of man from the incestuous ties to blood and soil, from the submission to idols, from slavery, from powerful masters, to freedom for the individual, for the nation, and for all of mankind.⁴ Perhaps we, today, can understand the Hebrew Bible better than any age before, precisely because we live in a time of revolution in which man, in spite of many errors that lead him into new forms of dependence, is shaking himself free of all forms of social bondage once sanctioned by God and the social laws. Perhaps, paradoxically enough, one of the oldest books of Western culture can be understood best by those who are least fettered by tradition and most aware of the radical nature of the process of liberation going on at the present time.

A few words must be said about my approach to the Bible in this book. I do not look at it as the word of God, not only because historical examination shows that it is a book written by men—different kinds of men, living in different times—but also because I am not a theist. Yet, to me, it is an extraordinary book, expressing many norms and principles that have maintained their validity throughout thousands of years. It is a book which has proclaimed a vision for men that is still valid and awaiting realization. It was not written by one man, nor dictated by God; it expresses the genius of a people struggling for life and freedom throughout many generations.

While I consider the historical and literary criticism of the Old Testament highly significant within its own frame of reference, I do not believe that it is essential to the purpose of this book, which is to help in the understanding of the biblical text, and not to give a historical analysis; however, where it seems important to me to refer to the results of historical or literary analysis of the Hebrew Bible I will do so.

The editors of the Bible did not always smooth out the contradictions between the various sources they used. But they must have been men of great insight and wisdom to transform the many parts into a unit reflecting an evolutionary process whose contradictions are aspects of a whole. Their editorship, and even the work of the sages who made the final choice of the Holy Scriptures, is, in a broad sense, a work of authorship.

The Hebrew Bible, in my opinion, can be treated as one book, in spite of the fact that it was compiled from many sources. It has become one book, not only through the work of the different editors but also through the fact that it has been read and understood as one book for the last two thousand years. In addition, individual passages change their meaning when they are transferred from their original sources into the new context of the Old Testament as a whole. Two examples may serve as an illustration for this. In Genesis 1:26 God says: Let us make man in our image. This, according to many Old Testament scholars, is an archaic sentence introduced by the editor of the Priestly Code without much change. According to some authors the sentence conceives of God as a human being. This may be perfectly true as far as the original archaic meaning of the text is concerned. But the question arises why the editor of this passage, who undoubtedly did not have such an archaic concept of God, did not change the sentence. I believe the reason is that for him the sentence meant that man, being created in God’s image, has a Godlike quality. Another example is the prohibition to make an image of God, or to use his name. It may very well be that originally this prohibition derived its meaning from an archaic custom found in some Semitic cults of considering God and his name as taboo; hence, they forbade making his image and using his name. But in the context of the entire book the meaning of the archaic taboo has been transformed into a new idea: namely, that God is not a thing, and therefore he cannot be presented in a name or in an image.

The Old Testament is the document depicting the evolution of a small, primitive nation, whose spiritual leaders insisted on the existence of one God and on the nonexistence of idols, to a religion with faith in a nameless God, in the final unification of all men, in the complete freedom of each individual.

Jewish history did not stop when the twenty-four books of the Old Testament had been codified. It went on and continued in its fuller course the evolution of ideas that had begun in the Hebrew Bible. There were two lines of continuation: one is expressed in the New Testament, the Christian Bible; the other in the Jewish development that is usually called the oral tradition. The Jewish sages have always emphasized the continuity and unity of the written tradition (the Old Testament) and the oral tradition. The latter was also codified: its older part, the Mishnah, around A.D. 200; its later part, the Gemara, around A.D. 500. It is a paradoxical fact that precisely from the standpoint which takes the Bible for what it historically is, a selection of writings over many centuries, it is easy to agree with the traditional view regarding the unity between the written and the oral traditions. The oral tradition, like the written Bible, contains the record of ideas expressed over a span of more than twelve hundred years. If we could imagine that a second Jewish Bible were to be written, it would contain the Talmud, the writings of Maimonides, the kabbalah, as well as the sayings of the Hasidic masters. If we could visualize such a collection of writings, it would cover only a few centuries more than the Old Testament, it would be composed by many authors living under entirely different circumstances, and it would present as many contradictory ideas and teachings as the Bible does. Of course such a second Bible does not exist and for many reasons could not have been compiled. But what I want to show by this idea is that the Old Testament represents the development of ideas over a long period of time, and that these ideas have continued developing during an even longer period, after the Old Testament had been codified. This continuity is dramatically and visually demonstrated on any given page of a Talmud printed today: it contains not only the Mishnah and Gemara but also subsequent commentaries and treatises written down to the present day, from before Maimonides to after the Vilna Gaon.

The Old Testament and the oral tradition both contain contradictions within themselves, but the contradictions are of a somewhat different character. Those in the Old Testament are largely due to the evolution of the Hebrews from a small nomadic tribe to a people who lived in Babylonia and were later influenced by Hellenistic culture. In the period following the completion of the Old Testament, the contradictions lie not in the evolution from archaic to civilized life; they lie more in the constant split between various opposing trends going through the whole history of Judaism from the destruction of the Temple to the destruction of the centers of traditional Jewish culture by Hitler. This split is that between nationalism and universalism, conservatism and radicalism, fanaticism and tolerance. The strengths of the two respective wings—and many sectors in between—have, of course, their reasons; they are to be found in the specific conditions of the countries in which Judaism developed (Palestine, Babylonia, Islamic North Africa and Spain, Christian medieval Europe, Czarist Russia) and in the specific social classes where the scholars originated.⁵

The foregoing remarks point to the difficulty in interpreting the Bible and the later Jewish tradition. Interpretation of an evolutionary process means showing the development of certain tendencies that have unfolded in the process of evolution. This interpretation makes it necessary to select those elements that constitute the main stream, or at least one main stream in the evolutionary process; this means weighing certain facts, selecting some as being more and others less representative. A history that ascribes the same importance to all facts is nothing but an enumeration of events; it fails to make sense of the events. Writing history always means interpreting history. The question is whether the interpreter has sufficient knowledge of, and respect for, the facts to avoid the danger of picking out some data to support a preconceived thesis. The only condition which the interpretation in the following pages must fulfill is that the passages from the Bible, the Talmud, and the later Jewish literature should not be rare and exceptional utterances but statements made by representative figures and part of a consistent and growing pattern of thought. Furthermore, contradictory statements must not be ignored, but taken for what they are: part of a whole in which contradictory patterns of thought existed side by side with the one emphasized in this book. It would require a work of much greater scope to offer proof that radical humanist thought is the one which marks the main stages of the evolution of the Jewish tradition, while the conservative-nationalistic pattern is the relatively unchanged relic of older times and never participated in the progressive evolution of Jewish thought in its contribution to universal human values.

Although I am not a specialist in the field of biblical scholarship, this book is the fruit of many years of reflection, as I have been studying the Old Testament and the Talmud since I was a child. Nevertheless, I would not have dared to publish these comments on Scripture were it not for the fact that I received my fundamental orientation concerning the Hebrew Bible and the later Jewish tradition from teachers who were great rabbinical scholars. All of them were representatives of the humanistic wing of the Jewish tradition, and strictly observing Jews. They differed greatly, however, from each other. One, Ludwig Krause, was a traditionalist, little touched by modern thought. Another, Nehemia Nobel, was a mystic, deeply steeped in Jewish mysticism as well as in the thought of Western humanism. The third, Salman B. Rabinkow, rooted in the Hasidic tradition, was a Socialist and a modern scholar. Although none of them left any extensive writings, they were well known to be among the most eminent Talmudic scholars living in Germany before the Nazi holocaust. Not being a practicing or a believing Jew, I am, of course, in a very different position from theirs, and least of all would I dare to make them responsible for the views expressed in this book. Yet my views have grown out of their teaching, and it is my conviction that at no point has the continuity between their teaching and my own views been interrupted. I was also encouraged to write this book by the example of the great Kantian Hermann Cohen, who, in his Die Religion der Vernunft aus den Quellen des Judentums, used the method of looking at the Old Testament together with the later Jewish tradition as a whole. Even though this little work cannot compare with his great opus, and although my conclusions sometimes differ from his, my method has been strongly influenced by his way of looking at the Bible.

The interpretation of the Bible given in this book is that of radical humanism. By radical humanism I refer to a global philosophy which emphasizes the oneness of the human race, the capacity of man to develop his own powers and to arrive at inner harmony and at the establishment of a peaceful world. Radical humanism considers the goal of man to be that of complete independence, and this implies penetrating through fictions and illusions to a full awareness of reality. It implies, furthermore, a skeptical attitude toward the use of force, precisely because during the history of man it has been, and still is, force—creating fear—which has made man ready to take fiction for reality, illusions for truth. It was force which made man incapable of independence and hence warped his reason and his emotions.

If it is possible to discover the seeds of radical humanism in the older sources of the Bible, it is only because we know the radical humanism of Amos, of Socrates, of the Renaissance humanists, of the Enlightenment, of Kant, Herder, Lessing, Goethe, Marx, Schweitzer. The seed becomes clearly recognizable only if one knows the flower; the earlier phase is often to be interpreted by the later phase, even though, genetically, the earlier phase precedes the later.

There is one more aspect of the radical humanist interpretation that needs to be mentioned. Ideas, especially if they are the ideas not only of a single individual but have become integrated into the historical process, have their roots in the real life of society. Hence, if one assumes that the idea of radical humanism is a major trend in the biblical and post-biblical tradition, one must assume that basic conditions existed throughout the history of the Jews which would have given rise to the existence and growth of the humanistic tendency. Are there such fundamental conditions? I believe there are and that it is not difficult to discover them. The Jews were in possession of effective and impressive secular power for only a short time, in fact, for only a few generations. After the reigns of David and Solomon, the pressure from the great powers in the north and south grew to such dimensions that Judah and Israel lived under the ever increasing threat of being conquered. And, indeed, conquered they were, never to recover. Even when the Jews later had formal political independence, they were a small and powerless satellite, subject to big powers. When the Romans finally put an end to the state after R. Yohanan ben Zakkai went over to the Roman side, asking only for permission to open an academy in Jabne to train future generations of rabbinical scholars, a Judaism without kings and priests emerged that had already been developing for centuries behind a facade to which the Romans gave only the final blow. Those prophets who had denounced the idolatrous admiration for secular power were vindicated by the course of history. Thus the prophetic teachings, and not Solomon’s splendor, became the dominant, lasting influence on Jewish thought. From then on the Jews, as a nation, never again regained power. On the contrary, throughout most of their history they suffered from those who were able to use force. No doubt their position also could, and did, give rise to national resentment, clannishness, arrogance; and this is the basis for the other trend within Jewish history mentioned above.

But is it not natural that the story of the liberation from slavery in Egypt, the speeches of the great humanist prophets, should have found an echo in the hearts of men who had experienced force only as its suffering objects, never as its executors? Is it surprising that the prophetic vision of a united, peaceful mankind, of justice for the poor and helpless, found fertile soil among the Jews and was never forgotten? Is it surprising that when the walls of the ghettos fell, Jews in disproportionately large numbers were among those who proclaimed the ideals of internationalism, peace, and justice? What from a mundane standpoint was the tragedy of the Jews—the loss of their country and their state—from the humanist standpoint was their greatest blessing: being among the suffering and despised, they were able to develop and uphold a tradition of humanism.

1. For a short and concise literary history of the Old Testament, I recommend Robert